V1 ensures you are above Vmcg for all of the parameters for your takeoff. Vr is always above Vmca and you climb out at V2(maybe plus something). At that point you don't really care what Vmc is because the other speeds have considered it.Hi thought of a question I can't find an answer to. Do 4 engine birds have multiple vmc airspeeds? For example do they have an inner outer and total engine failure vmcs or just the worst/ highest one like on smaller twins?
A B52 would have an absurdly high number of VMC speeds.
Indeed. Like @z987k said, V1 is (by definition) in excess of Vmcg, Vr is in excess of Vmca, and approach and landing speeds are in excess of Vmcl.To elabroate on the above response, V1 ensures you are above the vmca critical engine for a single engine out. VMCA-2, where you lose 2 on the same side, is significantly higher then V1 and often V2 at light weights.
Example A340
VMCL = 125 KTS; VMCL-2 = 157 KTS
(VMCL = VMCA in landing config)
Where Vmc becomes a serious limitation is when there is slush/ice on the runway, then vmcg often drives V1 way up.
It can't, since V1 cannot be lower then VMCG.It may drive V1 up, but the accelerate-stop equation will probably drive V1 right back down again.
It can't, since V1 cannot be lower then VMCG.
V1, by definition, is the decision speed where, with the one most critical engine failed, there is sufficent performance and control for the takeoff to continue at that power setting. V1 cannot be lower then VMCG as the aircraft will veer off the runway if the takeoff continues at speeds below VMCG.
In the situation where the runway is contaminated and ASD/TORA is limiting, the only way to get V1 down is to thrust limit/derate engine output, thereby reducing VMCG. Its one of the few times where it hurts to have too much thrust on a short runway.
Specifically 254 potentially different Vmc speeds. 2 to a power of 8, minus 2, for all the different possible combinations of engine failures except all operating and all failed.
It'd be fewer than that, though right, because if you lose engines that are opposite one another there'd be no controllability hit.
If you lose #1 and #8, or #2 and #7 and so on then you shouldn't have any appreciable controllability problems all things being equal.
If you're anywhere near Vmc in a jet, man, you're going to be walking down that brightly lit passageway toward the light pretty soon.